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The Little Lady Who Changed My Life

    She was four years old when I first met her. She was carrying a
    bowl of soup. She had very, very fine golden hair and a little pink
    shawl around her shoulders. I was 29 at the time and suffering from
    the flu. Little did I realize that this little lady was going to change
    my life.

    Her mom and I had been friends for many years. Eventually that
    friendship grew into care, from care into love, to marriage, and
    marriage brought the three of us together as a family. At first I was
    awkward because in the back of my mind, I thought I would be
    stuck with the dreaded label of "stepfather." And stepfathers were
    somehow mythically, or in a real sense, ogres as well as an
    emotional wedge in the special relationship between the child and
    the biological father.

    Early on I tried hard to make a natural transition from
    bachelorhood to fatherhood. A year and a half before we married, I
    took an apartment a few blocks away from their home. When it
    became evident that we would marry, I tried to spend time to
    enable a smooth changeover from friend to father figure. I tried not
    to become a wall between my future daughter and her natural
    father. Still I longed to be something special in her life.

    Over the years, my appreciation for her grew. Her honesty,
    sincerity and directness were mature beyond her years. I knew that
    within this child lived a very giving and compassionate adult. Still,
    I lived in the fear that some day, when I had to step in and be a
    disciplinarian, I might have it thrown in my face that I wasn’t her
    "real" father. If I wasn’t real, why would she have to listen to me?
    My actions became measured. I was probably more lenient than I
    wanted to be. I acted in that way in order to be liked, all the time
    living out a role I felt I had to live - thinking I wasn’t good enough
    or worthy enough on my own terms.

    During the turbulent teenage years, we seemed to drift apart
    emotionally. I seemed to lose control (or at least the parental
    illusion of control). She was searching for her identity and so was
    I. I found it increasingly hard to communicate with her. I felt a
    sense of loss and sadness because I was getting further from the
    feeling of oneness we had shared so easily in the beginning.

    Because she went to a parochial school, there was an annual
    retreat for all seniors. Evidently the students thought that going on
    retreat was like a week at Club Med. They boarded the bus with
    their guitars and racquetball gear. Little did they realize that this
    was going to be an emotional encounter that could have a lasting
    impression on them. As parents of the participants, we were asked
    to individually write a letter to our child, being open and honest
    and to write only positive things about our relationship. I wrote a
    letter about the little golden-haired girl who had brought me a bowl
    of soup when I needed care. During the course of the week, the
    students delved deeper into their real beings. They had an
    opportunity to read the letters we parents had prepared for them.

    The parents also got together one night during that week to think
    about and send good thoughts to our children. While she was away,
    I noticed something come out of me that I knew was there all along,
    but which I hadn’t faced. It was that in order to be fully
    appreciated I had to plainly be me. I didn’t have to act like anyone
    else. I wouldn’t be overlooked if I was true to myself. I just had to
    be the best me I could be. It may not sound like much to anyone
    else, but it was one of the biggest revelations of my life.

    The night arrived when they came home from their retreat
    experience. The parents and friends who had come to pick them up
    were asked to arrive early, and then invited into a large room
    where the lights were turned down low. Only the lights in the front
    of the room were shining brightly.

    The students marched joyously in, all dirty-faced as though they
    had just come back from summer camp. They filed in arm-in-arm,
    singing a song they had designated as their theme for the week.
    Through their smudgy faces, they radiated a new sense of belonging
    and love and self-confidence.

    When the lights were turned on, the kids realized that their parents
    and friends, who had come to collect them and share their joy,
    were also in the room. The students were allowed to make a few
    statements about their perceptions of the prior week. At first they
    reluctantly got up and said things like, "It was cool," and
    "Awesome week," but after a few moments you could begin to see
    a real vitality in the students’ eyes. They began to reveal things that
    underscored the importance of this rite of passage. Soon they were
    straining to get to the microphone. I noticed my daughter was
    anxious to say something. I was equally anxious to hear what she
    had to say.

    I could see my daughter determinedly inching her way up to the
    microphone. Finally she got to the front of the line. She said
    something like, "I had a great time and I learned a lot about
    myself." She continued, "I want to say there are people and things
    we sometimes take for granted that we shouldn’t, and I just want to
    say...I love you, Tony."

    At that moment my knees got weak. I had no expectations, no
    anticipation she would say anything so heartfelt. Immediately
    people around me started hugging me, and patting me on the back
    as though they also understood the depth of that remarkable
    statement. For a teenage girl to say openly in front of a room full of
    people, "I love you," took a great deal of courage. If there were
    something greater than being overwhelmed, I was experiencing it.

    Since then the magnitude of our relationship has increased. I have
    come to understand and appreciate that I didn’t need to have any
    fear about being a stepfather. I only have to concern myself with
    being the real person who can exchange honest love with the same
    little girl I met so many years before - carrying a bowl full of what
    turned out to be kindness. 

.
By Tony Luna
         from A 2nd Helping of Chicken Soup for the Soul 
      Copyright 1995 by Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen 
.
The Animal School

    Once upon a time, the animals decided they must do something
    heroic to meet the problems of "a new world." So they organized a
    school. 

    They adopted an activity curriculum consisting of running,
    climbing, swimming and flying. To make it easier to administer the
    curriculum, all the animals took all the subjects. 

    The duck was excellent in swimming, in fact better than his
    instructor, but he made only passing grades in flying and was very
    poor in running. Since he was slow in running, he had to stay after
    school and also drop swimming in order to practice running. This
    was kept up until his webbed feet were badly worn and he was
    only average in swimming. But average was acceptable in school,
    so nobody worried about that except the duck. 

    The rabbit started at the top of the class in running, but had a
    nervous breakdown because of so much make-up work in
    swimming. 

    The squirrel was excellent in climbing until he developed
    frustration in the flying class where his teacher made him start from
    the ground up instead of from the treetop down. He also developed
    a "charlie horse" from overexertion and then got a C in climbing
    and a D in running. 

    The eagle was a problem child and was disciplined severely. In
    the climbing class he beat all the others to the top of the tree, but
    insisted on using his own way to get there. 

    At the end of the year, an abnormal eel that could swim
    exceedingly well, and also run, climb and fly a little, had the
    highest average and was valedictorian. 

    The prairie dogs stayed out of school and fought the tax levy
    because the administration would not add digging and burrowing to
    the curriculum. They apprenticed their children to a badger and
    later joined the groundhogs and gophers to start a successful
    private school. 

    Does this fable have a moral? 

.
By George H. Reavis 
from Chicken Soup for the Soul 
Copyright 1993 by Jack Canfield & Mark Victor Hansen
.
He's My Dad

    To Each Staff Member of this Facility: 

    As you pick up that chart today and scan that green Medicaid card,
    I hope you will remember what I am about to say. 

    I spent yesterday with you. I was there with my mother and father.
    We didn't know where we were supposed to go or what we were
    supposed to do, for we had never needed your services before. We
    have never before been labeled charity. 

    I watched yesterday as my dad became a diagnosis, a chart, a case
    number, a charity case labeled "no sponsor" because he had no
    health insurance. 

    I saw a weak man stand in line, waiting for five hours to be
    shuffled through a system of impatient office workers, a burned-out
    nursing staff and a budget-scarce facility, being robbed of any
    dignity and pride he may have had left. I was amazed at how
    impersonal your staff was, huffing and blowing when the patient
    did not present the correct form, speaking carelessly of other
    patients' cases in front of passersby, of lunch breaks that would be
    spent away from this "poor man's hell." 

    My dad is only a green card, a file number to clutter your desk on
    appointment day, a patient who will ask for directions twice after
    they've been mechanically given the first time. But, no, that's not
    really my dad. That's only what you see. 

    What you don't see is a cabinetmaker since the age of 14, a
    self-employed man who has a wonderful wife, four grown kids
    (who visit too much), and five grandchildren (with two more on the
    way) - all of whom think their "pop" is the greatest. This man is
    everything a daddy should be - strong and firm, yet tender, rough
    around the edges, a country boy, yet respected by prominent
    business owners. 

    He's my dad, the man who raised me through thick and thin, gave
    me away as a bride, held my children at their births, stuffed a $20
    bill into my hand when times were tough and comforted me when I
    cried. Now we are told that before long cancer will take this man
    away from us. 

    You may say these are the words of a grieving daughter lashing out
    in helplessness at the prospect of losing a loved one. I would not
    disagree. Yet I would urge you not to discount what I say. Never
    lose sight of the people behind your charts. Each chart represents a
    person - with feelings, a history, a life - whom you have the power
    to touch for one day by your words and actions. Tomorrow it may
    be your loved one - your relative or neighbor - who turns into a
    case number, a green card, a name to be marked off with a yellow
    marker as done for the day. 

    I pray that you will reward the next person you greet at your station
    with a kind word or smile because that person is someone's dad,
    husband, wife, mother, son, or daughter - or simply because he or
    she is a human being, created and loved by God, just as you are.

.
By Author Unknown 
Submitted by Holly Cresswell 
from A 2nd Helping of Chicken Soup for the Soul 
Copyright 1995 by Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen

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Food For Thought
 
Sun Tzu The Art Of War
Encouraging Quotes And Excerpts
Encouraging Stories
Jokes
 A Page to Rest - 
Breathing Space
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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